Romantic comedy Think Like A Man — which has made a whopping $85 million at the box office in this country, more than seven times its budget — will not open in France. This despite the fact that the flick was the number one movie here in the U.S. two weeks in a row, and in the top 3 at the box office for one solid month.

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According to a post by Fabienne Flessel at Global Voices, a NegroNews Facebook post republished on Martinican blog People Bo Kay offers this as explanation:

Black actor and producer Tyler Perry's movies are never scheduled in any French movie theaters or are only released in DVDs, even though he has been used to leading the US box-office, as with ‘Why did I get Married' and ‘For Colored Girls'. The French society acts hypocritically, when it refuses to show movies from black producers who earn millions from conveying a positive message to the African diaspora through their films.

Films about African-American people often have a tough time at foreign box offices; the flicks that do well in a global scale are epic fantasy adventures, likeAvatar, Titanic, Harry Potter and The Avengers. But do we even really know how the box office would respond to flicks with black people in them, if these films never get screened? The first rule of screenwriting is that if it's personal, it's universal. And even if the premise of Think Like A Man is loathsome, the themes and characters — mama's boys, underachievers, take-charge ladies, lazy dudes and players looking for love — are relatable. The emotions and situations are recognizable if you are human; the country you come from shouldn't matter. An apartment-dweller in New York can enjoy a movie about nomads in Mongolia who live in a yurt. What's more, seeing a movie like Think Like A Man in the theaters — surrounded by laughter — is art of the appeal.

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Of course, in this case, it is unclear if the move is financial or if there's something else at work; the NegroNews note also reads:

The French state has had a sociopolitical strategy which favors interracial relationships rather than valuing communities. In the comedy ‘Think like a Man', the focus is on black couples.